Market Research
Market Research
Market Research
MARKET RESEARCH
Product-oriented business: such firms produce the product first and then tries to find a market
for it. Their concentration is on the product – its quality and price. Firms producing electrical and
digital goods such as refrigerators and computers are examples of product-oriented businesses.
Market-oriented businesses: such firms will conduct market research to see what consumers
want and then produce goods and services to satisfy them. They will set a marketing budget and
undertake the different methods of researching consumer tastes and spending patterns, as well as
market conditions. Example, mobile phone markets.
Market research is the process of collecting, analysing and interpreting information about a
product.
Why is market research important/needed?
Firms need to conduct market research in order to ensure that they are producing goods and
services that will sell successfully in the market and generate profits. If they don’t, they could lose a
lot of money and fail to survive. Market research will answer a lot of the business’s questions prior
to product development such as ‘will customers be willing to buy this product?’, ‘what is the biggest
factor that influences customers’ buying preferences- price or quality?’, ‘what is the competition in
the market like?’ and so on.
Market research data can be quantitative (numerical-what percentage of teenagers in the city have
internet access) or qualitative (opinion/ judgement- why do more women buy the company’s
product than men?)
Market research methods can be categorized into two: primary and secondary market research.
Primary Market Research (Field Research)
The collection of original data. It involves directly collecting information from existing or potential
customers. First-hand data is collected by people who want to use the data (i.e. the firm). Examples
of primary market research methods include questionnaires, focus groups, interviews, observation,
and online surveys and so on.
The process of primary research:
1. Establish the purpose of the market research
2. Decide on the most suitable market research method
3. Decide the size of the sample (customers to conduct research on) and identify the sample
4. Carry out the research
5. Collate and analyse the data
6. Produce a report of the findings
Sample is a subset of a population that is used to represent the entire group as a whole. When
doing research, it is often impractical to survey every member of a particular population because
the number of people is simply too large. Selecting a sample is called sampling. A random
sampling occurs when people are selected at random for research, while quota sampling is when
people are selected on the basis of certain characteristics (age, gender, location etc.) for research.
Methods of primary research
1. Questionnaires: Can be done face-to-face, through telephone, post or the internet. Online
surveys can also be conducted whereby researchers will email the sample members to go
onto a particular website and fill out a questionnaire posted there. These questions need to
be unbiased, clear and easy to answer to ensure that reliable and accurate answers are
logged in.
Advantages:
Detailed information can be collected
Customer’s opinions about the product can be obtained
Online surveys will be cheaper and easier to collate and analyse
Can be linked to prize draws and prize draw websites to encourage customers to fill
out surveys
Disadvantages:
If questions are not clear or are misleading, then unreliable answers will be given
Time-consuming and expensive to carry out research, collate and analyse them.
2. Interviews: interviewer will have ready-made questions for the interviewee.
Advantages:
Interviewer is able to explain questions that the interviewee doesn’t understand and
can also ask follow-up questions
Can gather detailed responses and interpret body-language, allowing interviewer to
come to accurate conclusions about the customer’s opinions.
Disadvantages:
The interviewer could lead and influence the interviewee to answer a certain way.
For example, by rephrasing a question such as ‘Would you buy this product’ to ‘But,
you would definitely buy this product, right?’ to which the customer in order to
appear polite would say yes when in actuality they wouldn’t buy the product.
Time-consuming and expensive to interview everyone in the sample
3. Focus Groups: A group of people representative of the target market (a focus group) agree
to provide information about a particular product or general spending patterns over time.
They can also test the company’s products and give opinions on them.
Advantage:
They can provide detailed information about the consumer’s opinions
Disadvantages:
Time-consuming
Expensive
Opinions could be influenced by others in the group.
4. Observation: This can take the form of recording (eg: meters fitted to TV screens to see
what channels are being watched), watching (eg: counting how many people enter a shop),
auditing (e.g.: counting of stock in shops to see which products sold well).
Advantage:
Inexpensive
Disadvantage:
Only gives basic figures. Does not tell the firm why consumer buys them.
Charts: show the total figures for each piece of data (bar/ column charts) or the proportion
of each piece of data in terms of the total number (pie charts). For example the above tally
table data can be recorded in a bar chart as shown below:
The pie chart above could show a company’s market share in different countries.
Graphs: used to show the relationship between two sets of data. For example how average
temperature varied across the year.